I am super impressed, but did you see these?

http://www.wolfsburgwest.com/cart/DetailsList.cfm?ID=113853615





-----Original Message-----
From: Bert Knupp <[email protected]>
To: vintagvw <[email protected]>
Sent: Mon, Jul 6, 2015 5:37 pm
Subject: RE: [vintagvw] Hood VW emblems


  
Volks,
  
I know that everyone is wondering how I solved my VW hood emblem problem.  You 
may recall that the three pins on my VW emblem did not match up with the three 
holes in my 1970-something aftermarket (but Original VW Parts) hood with the 
flat emblem area.  My former hood – a Brazilian aftermarket job – had three 
holes each containing a polyethylene tube grommet, allowing the pins of the 
emblem to push neatly down into them and stay put.
  
  
The PE tube grommets seem to be unobtainium.  I like that attachment system 
since it allows removal of the emblem with no damage to the pins, something the 
usual push clips don't guarantee.  SO I made a substitute. For you authenticity 
buffs, here's my solution. (Somebody else said, "Just glue it." Sorry, not my 
style.)
  
Using the long 5/32" polyethylene tube from a used Windex bottle, I heated the 
end of it almost to melting, then pushed it firmly in turn onto each of the 
emblem's 3 pins.  It slid on, then mushroomed out a bit at the leading tip as 
it "bottomed out."  I cut off each piece kust short of the pin length.
  
Into a scrap of inner-tube rubber, I punched three 5/32" holes, then cut out 
little pieces around the holes. These three slid neatly onto the Windex tubing 
covered pins.
  
But I did have to drill. Using a Dremel tool, I gently expanded and spaced each 
of the three holes in the hood to about 5/32" Ø or a smidge larger, using my 
emblem and its new plastic-covered pins as a guide. Cleaned them, then covered 
all exposed metal with a touch-up paint brush (using close-matching Rust-Oleum) 
and let them dry for a half day or so.  This afternoon I carefully set my 
emblem onto the holes, made sure it was well aligned, and pressed the emblem 
firmly down into the new holes. Ta-daa!  It was a firm, but clean fit!  The 
emblem is in the right place, sits down onto the hood (with a paper thickness 
between it and the paint, allowing drainage), and looks like a factory job.  
I'll seal the underside with some brush-daubed Rust-Oleum.
  
I regret that I can't find a hood with the raised pedestal for the round VW 
emblem. The VW dealers only sold flat hoods as replacement parts, and my 1970 
really, really should have had a raised one. The incorrectness aside, though, 
this DIY grommeting system appears to have worked well.  I won't be getting 
rain water into my trunk, I shouldn't have any rust, and the emblem looks like 
factory-correct.
  
Thanks to all you guys -- Yves and Lloyd in particular but also Mike and Erin 
(N.Q.) -- for tips and ideas.
  
What a list!
  
Bert Knupp in Music City
  
  
 --  
 Visit the VintagVW archives at  
http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected] 
 ---  
 You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"VintagVW - Air Cooled Volkswagen Discussion List" group. 
 To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an 
email to  [email protected]. 
 To post to this group, send email to  [email protected]. 
 Visit this group at  http://groups.google.com/group/vintagvw. 
 For more options, visit  https://groups.google.com/d/optout. 
 

-- 
Visit the VintagVW archives at 
http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]
--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"VintagVW - Air Cooled Volkswagen Discussion List" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
Visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/vintagvw.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to